358 research outputs found

    Genome hyperevolution and the success of a parasite

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    The strategy of antigenic variation is to present a constantly changing population phenotype that enhances parasite transmission, through evasion of immunity arising within, or existing between, host animals. Trypanosome antigenic variation occurs through spontaneous switching among members of a silent archive of many hundreds of variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) antigen genes. As with such contingency systems in other pathogens, switching appears to be triggered through inherently unstable DNA sequences. The archive occupies subtelomeres, a genome partition that promotes hypermutagenesis and, through telomere position effects, singular expression of VSG. Trypanosome antigenic variation is augmented greatly by the formation of mosaic genes from segments of pseudo-VSG, an example of implicit genetic information. Hypermutation occurs apparently evenly across the whole archive, without direct selection on individual VSG, demonstrating second-order selection of the underlying mechanisms. Coordination of antigenic variation, and thereby transmission, occurs through networking of trypanosome traits expressed at different scales from molecules to host populations

    Optimised design of fibre-based pulse compressor for gain-switched DFB laser pulses at 1.5 µm

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    An optical-fibre based pulse compressor for gain-switched DFB laser pulses has been optimised using a systematic procedure based on the initial complete characterisation of the laser pulses, followed by numerical simulations of the pulse propagation in different types of fibre to determine the required lengths for optimum compression. Using both linear and nonlinear compression techniques, an optimum compression factor of 12 is achieved

    Ultra-sensitive all-optical sampling at 1.5 μm using waveguide two-photon absorption

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    We demonstrate a simple and ultra-sensitive all-optical sampling system suitable for the characterization of high capacity (> 100 Gbit/s) single channel systems operating around 1.5 µm. The system is based on the nonlinear effect of two-photon-absorption in a commercial 1.3 µm semiconductor laser and, using only direct detection of the unamplified two photon absorption photocurrent, we have achieved a temporal resolution of around 2 ps, and a sensitivity of less than 2 mW²

    Ecosystem processes, land cover, climate, and human settlement shape dynamic distributions for golden eagle across the western US

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    Species–environment relationships for highly mobile species outside of the breeding season are often highly dynamic in response to the collective effects of everchanging climatic conditions, food resources, and anthropogenic disturbance. Capturing dynamic space-use patterns in a model-based framework is critical as model inference often drives place-based conservation planning. We applied dynamic occupancy models to broad-scale golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos survey data collected annually from 2006 to 2012 during the late summer post-fledging period in the western US. We defined survey sites as 10 km transect segments with a 1 km buffer on either transect side (n = 3540). Derived estimates of occupancy were low (4.4–7.9%) and turnover rates – the probability that occupied sites were newly occupied – were high (88–94%), demonstrating that annual transiency in occupancy dominates late summer behavior for golden eagles. Despite low philopatry during late summer, variation in golden eagle occupancy could be explained by a suite of land cover and annual-varying covariates including gross primary productivity, drought severity, and human disturbance. Our summary of 13 years of predicted occupancy by golden eagles across the western United States identified areas that are consistently used and that may contribute significantly to golden eagle conservation. Restricting development and targeting mitigation efforts in these areas offers practitioners a framework for conservation prioritization

    Perceptions About The ISO 9000 (2000) Quality System Standard Revision And Its Value: The Dutch Experience

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    The aim of the research reported in this paper is to assess the relative value of the 2000 version of the ISO 9000 series of quality management system standards in comparison to the 1994 version. 773 organisations in the Netherlands which have all been certified to the ISO 9000 standard were surveyed (a response rate of 21.4%) and of these only 22 had not yet converted to the 2000 version of the standard. Amongst the major findings are an overall positive perception of the value of the ISO 9000 (2000) quality system standard and a consistently higher appreciation of the 2000 version compared to the 1994 version

    The E-Business Research Network: summary of the results of the Dutch pilot survey

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    A project has been started with the intention to develop an E-Business Research Network on E-business related research in business and management. The initiative has been taken in co-operation between Erasmus University and UMIST to develop a project in which the first stage concerns the development of a database of researchers and their activities in e-business related research in business and management. The next stage will be to investigate the needs in companies in relation to e-business. It is hoped that an Internet-based database will stimulate interaction and communication between the supply and demand sides of e-business related research. This assumption is based on our previous research in Quality Management conducted in the early to mid 1990's. This paper describes the project and also summarises the results of the first pilot questionnaire based on responses from researchers at universities in The Netherlands

    Synthesis and structural characterization of Zn2+, Cd2+ and Hg2+ complexes with tripyrrolidinophosphine chalcogenides

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    Authors are grateful to the Tunisian Ministry of High Education and Scientific Research for support [grant number: LR99ES14] and to the French Service for Cooperation and Cultural Action (SCAC) in Nouakchott, Mauritania for a scholarship to KE.Six new complexes of zinc(II), cadmium(II) and mercury(II) chlorides with tripyrrolidinophosphine chalcogenides of the types [MCl2(Pyrr3PE)2] (M = Zn, E = S (1) or E = Se (2); M = Cd, E = S (3) or E = Se (4)) and [{HgCl(Pyrr3PE)}2(µ-Cl)2] (E = S (5) or Se (6)) have been prepared in yields of 66-92% by reaction of the ligands with metal chloride in ethanol and characterized by 1H and 31P NMR, IR, elemental analysis, conductivity, and single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The results show that the complexes are pseudo-tetrahedral containing coordinated chloride ions. Interestingly, the X-ray studies reveal that while the title ligands produce dinuclear complexes with Hg, their Cd and Zn complexes are mononuclear. The tetrahedral bond angles vary from 85.69(5)° to 126.25(4)° in dinuclear complexes 5 and 6 and from 93.51(3)° to 117.38(3)° in mononuclear species 2-4. The E = S bond lengths are in the range 1.999(9)-2.198(2) Å. The coordination properties of the title ligands are discussed and compared to those obtained for their bulkier counterparts.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Adult attachment style across individuals and role-relationships: Avoidance is relationship-specific, but anxiety shows greater generalizability

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    A generalisability study examined the hypotheses that avoidant attachment, reflecting the representation of others, should be more relationship-specific (vary across relationships more than across individuals), while attachment anxiety, reflecting self-representation, should be more generalisable across a person’s relationships. College students responded to 6-item questionnaire measures of these variables for 5 relationships (mother, father, best same-gender friend, romantic partner or best opposite-gender friend, other close person), on 3 (N = 120) or 2 (N = 77) occasions separated by a few weeks. Results supported the hypotheses, with the person variance component being larger than the relationship-specific component for anxiety, and the opposite happening for avoidance. Anxiety therefore seems not to be as relationship-specific as previous research suggested. Possible reasons for discrepancies between the current and previous studies are discussed
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